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Dawson Regional Land Use Plan

The Yukon Government, the Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in First Nation, and the Yukon Land Use Planning Council re-established a regional planning process around Dawson City. This new Commission has begun work in spring 2019 with the aim to deliver a regional plan. There is a Dawson Regional Planning Commission website. The Dawson Regional Land Use Plan (DRLUP)) area encompasses 39,854 km2. There is one major Yukon community within it, the City of Dawson. Despite the Covid-19 freeze on physical meetings, the DRLUP process continues. The DRLUP Commission is always accepting feedback, you can learn about upcoming events and connect with them by visiting their engagement website Engagedawson.planyukon.ca

In response to all the submissions it has received the Dawson Reginal Land Use Planning (DRLUP) Commission has issued a report, called “In Your Words”. This is a compendium of the comments the Commission has received thus far.

Some comments relate to the DRLUP Commission Resource Assessment Report, most of them are Interests and Issues submissions. YCS staff have analysed the comments and has perceived the following key takeaways:

The mining community is motivated and organized; they have dominated engagement so far.

The Conservation Community needs to engage more vigorously!

Miners insist they will be content with industrializing only 1% of the region at any one time.

But they want permanent access to 100% so they can decide exactly which 1% they want, at which time.

The DRLUP Commission discussed and assessed how well their Engagement strategy is working. They found they have not adequately engaged with several identifiable groups including:

Elders/Seniors and Youth,

Tourism Industry,

Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in citizens.

Other interesting developments as noted by YCS staff:

White River First Nation is opposed to the Plan and Process because they feel shut out of it; they are calling for equal representation and decision making powers for all affected FNs who’s asserted territories overlap with the planning region.

Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) provided a crackerjack “Cliome” (Climate-Biome) submission, which projected how climate change will affect the ecology of the region. WCS identified habitat connectivity and large river corridors as priorities for the Plan

The Yukon Chamber of Mines asserted that one in six jobs in the Yukon are dependent upon a mine and therefore no land should be withdrawn from staking.

Perhaps the most interesting and troubling part of the report was the results from the on-line survey. This is where the mining community seemed to have really engaged.

64 miners responded to the survey, compared to 7 from the conservation community (and only 3 from tourism).

Unsurprisingly, a common sentiment expressed by respondents was that most tourists come for the mining.

A summary of issues that were identified in the "In Your Words" report as needing improvement:

1. Mining:

Do not withdraw any more land from staking.

Build more roads

Support placer mining

Reduce impact of placer mining.

2. Environment:

Salmon

Use more local renewable resources

More protected areas

3. Tourism:

Better infrastructure (for example, trails) to encourage ecotourism

Potential related to FN tourism

Mining tourism

4. Communication:

Communicate with land users

Communicate with partners

There was general agreement that there has been an increase in population and impacts, and a decrease in wildlife and intact habitat. The inescapable conclusion from YCS is that the mining community has been first out of the gate when it comes to engagement in the DRLUP compared to the conservation, tourism, and First Nation communities. This is the precise opposite of what happened during the Peel Watershed Plan process.

Next Steps for the Dawson Regional Planning Commission:

Finalize the Resource Assessment Report

Present the Draft Plan Goals and Objectives to the public for engagement some time in the summer of 2020.